Snowden mocks British PM for terming Panama Papers leak ‘private matter’

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The man hailed by some as one of personal privacy’s greatest defenders has expressed surprise at a statement made by David Cameron about the Panama Papers leaked on Sunday.

Edward Snowden, the National Security Agency whistleblower who in 2013 revealed numerous covert global surveillance programs, was shocked by the PM’s insistence that his father’s implication in the list of high-profile tax avoiders was “a private matter”.

The late Ian Cameron’s Blairmore Holdings Inc Company, set up in the 1980s, managed tens of millions of pounds for the wealthy but has not ever paid tax on UK profits.

Despite there being no suggestion that the avoidance arrangement or others exposed by the leak were anything but entirely legal, Cameron responded to the news saying:

“That is a private matter; I am focused on what the government is doing.”

But that defence didn’t wash well with Snowden, who was less than impressed at Cameron’s answer after the prime minister had repeatedly criticised him for leaking classified information.

In a post on Twitter on Monday, Snowden wrote simply in response to a story on Cameron’s response: “Oh, now he’s interested in privacy.”

Reacting to the news, Snowden mused: “Resignation of Iceland’s PM may explain why the UK PM is so insistent public has no right to know a PM’s ‘private’ finances.”


Snowden’s sentiment was quickly echoed by others, including Carol Vordeman.

The former ‘Countdown star’ labelled Cameron a “hypocrite” and insisted the issue was “not a private matter”.

Courtesy Huffington Post